Common Questions About Gifted Children • Back To Sections »


"A gifted student is one who demonstrates a high degree of intellectual and/or creative ability(ies), exhibits an exceptionally high degree of motivation and/or excels in specific academic field(s) and needs special instruction and/or ancillary services to achieve at levels commensurate with his or her abilities."

- State Rule 160-4-2-.38

 What is the difference between a bright child and gifted child?

 

Bright Child vs. Gifted Learner

 

Knows the answers                            Asks the questions 

Is interested                                        Is highly curious

Is attentive                                          Is mentally and physically involved 

 Has good ideas                                   Has wild, silly ideas

Works hard                                           Plays around, yet tests well

Answers the questions                          Discusses in detail, elaborates    

Top group                                             Beyond the group

Listens with interest                             Shows strong feelings/opinions

Learns with ease                                  Already knows

6-8 repetitions for mastery                     1-2 repetitions for mastery

Understands ideas                                 Constructs abstractions

Enjoys peers                                           Prefers adults

Grasps the meaning                                Draws inferences

Completes assignments                           Initiates projects

Is receptive                                               Is intense

Copies accurately                                     Creates a new design

Enjoys school                                            Enjoys learning

Absorbs information                                  Manipulates information

Technician                                                Inventor

Good at memorization                              Good guesser

Enjoys straightforward                              Thrives on complexity
    sequential presentation

Is alert                                                       Is keenly observant

Is pleased with own learning                    Is highly self-critical

http://pages.framingham.k12.ma.us/sage/brightchild.htm

Aren't gifted students high achievers and don't they perform well in school?  

 

This, as well as other myths, are listed below along with the truths about gifted children.  

 

Common Myths About Gifted Students

  • Gifted students are a homogeneous group, all high achievers.
  • Gifted students do not need help. If they are really gifted, they can manage on their own.
  • Gifted students have fewer problems than others because their intelligence and abilities somehow exempt them from the hassles of daily life.
  • The future of a gifted student is assured: a world of opportunities lies before the student.
  • Gifted students are self-directed; they know where they are heading.
  • The social and emotional development of the gifted student is at the same level as his or her intellectual development.
  • Gifted students are nerds and social isolates.
  • The primary value of the gifted student lies in his or her brain power.
  • The gifted student's family always prizes his or her abilities.
  • Gifted students need to serve as examples to others and they should always assume extra responsibility.
  • Gifted students make everyone else smarter.
  • Gifted students can accomplish anything they put their minds to. All they have to do is apply themselves.
  • Gifted students are naturally creative and do not need encouragement.
  • Gifted children are easy to raise and a welcome addition to any classroom.

Truths About Gifted Students

  • Gifted students are often perfectionistic and idealistic. They may equate achievement and grades with self-esteem and self-worth, which sometimes leads to fear of failure and interferes with achievement.
  • Gifted students may experience heightened sensitivity to their own expectations and those of others, resulting in guilt over achievements or grades perceived to be low.
  • Gifted students are asynchronous. Their chronological age, social, physical, emotional, and intellectual development may all be at different levels. For example, a 5-year-old may be able to read and comprehend a third-grade book but may not be able to write legibly.
  • Some gifted children are "mappers" (sequential learners), while others are "leapers" (spatial learners). Leapers may not know how they got a "right answer." Mappers may get lost in the steps leading to the right answer.
  • Gifted students may be so far ahead of their chronological age mates that they know more than half the curriculum before the school year begins! Their boredom can result in low achievement and grades.
  • Gifted children are problem solvers. They benefit from working on open-ended, interdisciplinary problems; for example, how to solve a shortage of community resources. Gifted students often refuse to work for grades alone.
  • Gifted students often think abstractly and with such complexity that they may need help with concrete study- and test-taking skills. They may not be able to select one answer in a multiple choice question because they see how all the answers might be correct.
  • Gifted students who do well in school may define success as getting an "A" and failure as any grade less than an "A." By early adolescence they may be unwilling to try anything where they are not certain of guaranteed success.

http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/eric/fact/myths.html